What are the opinions here on the Mallik 2002 test drilling for gas hydrates? Apparently they had succesfully exploited gas hydrates. At least for a few days before the well was capped.

They apparently also had a conference, as this PDF file states. Anyone aware what came out of that?
Oddly enough I seem not to be able to find anything about this. You'd think I'd be able to find more results on that site..

What are the opinions here on the Mallik 2002 test drilling for gas hydrates? Apparently they had succesfully exploited gas hydrates. At least for a few days before the well was capped.

Let me try to rephrase that question: Does this mean that gas hysdrates are exploitable on a (very) large scale? If so, that would certainly mean a enormous postponement of peak natural gas. From what I've read this Mallik field consists of hydrates which were formed of methane coming from a natural gas field which hit the permafrost barrier. That doesn't sound like the regular gas hydrate found in the ocean floor. I'm quite interested in the opinions among the posters of this forum on this experimental drilling and what it might mean for the future of natural gas.

"All the clean hydrogen we need to power the world is already contained in crystals at the bottom of the ocean called gas hydrates."

And their answer was:

TRUE. The mainstream U.S. press doesn't talk about it much, but the world's hydrogen problems have a ready solution. Frozen ice crystals found off the shores of Canada, Japan, Russia, Iceland and other nations with Northern shores contain vast quantities of clean, frozen hydrogen -- enough to power the entire world far beyond the limits of petroleum reserves. The U.S. press doesn't talk much about gas hydrates, preferring to focus on hydrogen derived from either natural gas or petroleum (resources the U.S. tends to own or control).

also, it's not hydrogen that's frozen in the crystals...it's methane (natural gas). The problem is getting/harvesting it, and even if we did find a sollution to that...it would likely release more greenhouse gasses that the planet could handle (as already stated).

Edit
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Regarding the relation between methane and hydrogen. The report is not wrong: methane = CH4 and for people who are really interested about the facts I suggest to delve into the NREL/DOE site (hydrogen program) and/or read the Risoe report (Europeans). One will then find out that the hydrogen economy is really a natural gas/methane hydrate economy. Methane is reformed to hydrogen ...

"Nuclear power has long been to the Left what embryonic-stem-cell research is to the Right--irredeemably wrong and a signifier of moral weakness."Esquire Magazine,12/05
The genetic code is commaless and so are my posts.

"All the clean hydrogen we need to power the world is already contained in crystals at the bottom of the ocean called gas hydrates."

They are either liars or incompetents. Methane hydrates are just as fossil as natural gas is.
And by the way, no one has ever managed to extract the methane hydrates. This is just as credible as stating there is no proplems since we have fusion. We only have to tinker with it a bit.

The remaining large stores of hydrocarbons all have their challenges. There is shale oil, which is kerogen (oil that's not done cooking yet) and tar sands. Both need to be cooked into usable forms, which is generally bad for your EROEI. Then there are methyl hydrate deposits. This is methane, which is very good as methane is an extremely usable hydrocarbon. The problem here is harvesting the methane. One of the nice things about oil wells is that the oil comes out under its own pressure through a very convenient pipe which can be regulated, capped, etc. It's free lunch, literally. Methyl hydrates are distributed over a large area and can be dangerous if disturbed. Some of the Bermuda Triangle happenings were probably related to methane bubbling to the surface and destroying the buoyancy of anything floating. There are tales of small vessels going down like a rock in water that resembled bubbling champagne. The environmental consequences of a huge release of methane into the atmosphere are equally frightening. There is a theory that a mass extinction 250 million years ago might have been triggered by methyl hydrates suddenly being released all over the earth.

Harvesting this stuff doesn't sound easy. The crystals must be kept cold all the way to the surface to avoid loosing the methane. Then there is the flammability issue. It's one thing to have NG leaking out of a well on an oil platform, it's quite another to have it bubbling up all around you! That gives a whole new meaning to NO SMOKING!

There just ain't no substitute for good old fashioned light sweet crude and the NG that pressurizes it!

Taiwan geologists have confirmed the existence of more than 500 billion cubic meters of gas hydrate off the southwest coast, enough to meet the island's gas needs for over 60 years, a government geologist said on Monday.

But commercial extraction is likely much more than a decade away as techniques to tap the gas are still being developed, Wang Yunshuen, section chief of the mineral resources section, at the Central Geological Survey.

I haven't seen any mention of "Gas Hydrates" around on the site..
AKA "Ice that Burns"
Methane gas hydrate?
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Gas hydrate is an ice-like solid that results from the trapping of methane molecules - the main component of natural gas - within a lattice-like cage of water molecules. Dubbed the "ice that burns," this substance releases gaseous methane when it melts.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 180908.htm****************************************************
The size of the global gas hydrate resource is staggering, holding more ultimate energy potential than all other fossil fuels combined, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). In the United States, where gas hydrate occurs beneath the permafrost of Alaska's arctic north and below the seabed offshore, the volume of this resource is massive. USGS estimates that the Nation's gas hydrate deposits contain 200,000 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of natural gas. Compare this with a known recoverable natural gas resource of approximately 1,500 Tcf. If just one percent of the gas hydrate resource could be rendered producible, our Nation's natural gas resource base would more than double.

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They are also looking into a area known as Hydrate Ridge off the Oregon Coast
I also think, IMBY off the coast of Cape Hatteris, >>>>>North Carolina Folks<<<< theres prospects that have huge amounts of Natural Gas, and/or OIL have been found/discovered around 30 years ago.....
I think Mobil was doing the Geological Survey's back them... Looked VERY Promising...
CT

ok about the East Coast, yes it was off Cape Hatteris..
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In 1995, ODP researchers drilled into gas hydrates in a relatively stable area off the U.S. east coast. Scientists have estimated that area could contain enough methane to supply U.S. energy needs for more than 100 years.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 072713.htm

There are mega-tons of the stuff at the bottom of the ocean all over the world and in the Arctic permafrost (about 300,000 trillion cubic feet of it) and it is the cleanest and most abundant source of energy in the world. There is at least twice as much of it around as fossil fuels (some say 10 times as much). And, when burned as a fuel, it releases less carbon dioxide pollution than anything else around. w.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/11/021105081158.htm